hahnmeister
In Memoriam
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=12964599#post12964599 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by pdelcast
Dude -- I'm afraid you have a few things wrong...
DC motors work by converting the DC to AC either by using brushes or by using a synchronous controller. So there isn't any real difference between DC and AC motors. No rotary motors use pure DC as a power source. (well, actually homopolar motors use pure DC, but they are extremely rare, and very very poor efficiency.)
RMS wattage is real wattage. It is essentially the integral of the power function over the time domain. VA is NOT the real wattage -- you have them backwards. VA (when talking about AC wattage) is a generalized mean (OR peak power -- which isn't the same as watts, which is a measurement of energy usage)- - less accurate than a true RMS measurement. RMS wattage works with sinusoidal, square, multiphase ... you name it. VA only works with DC or Sinusoidal currents. A lot of people use simplified RMS calculations -- and get VA instead (which is incorrect) -- the proper RMS calculations return TRUE average power by a varying load.
The most efficient widely available current motor designs are DC Permanent magnet brushless (where the controller converts DC to three phase AC synchronously with motor rotation.) Efficiencies on those types of motor typically exceed 90% -- BUT, copper rotor induction motors are very close (85-87%), and don't have the AC-DC conversion efficiency losses.
Real Wattage/VA = RMS wattage / Power Factor
Power Factor = direct term in calculating efficiency of a motor, so a motor with a PF of .4 will be no more than 40% efficient. DC motors dont have a power factor and the VA = RMS.
VA only works with DC or Sinusoidal currents? Well, AC is sinusoidal, no?
I really dont care to go into integrals and such here, but for all practical purposes, I dont see what you say is wrong here. I realize that most DC motors rely on some method of conversion back to AC for polarity, but this is what also allows them to vary their speed according to voltage, and they still keep their efficiency much better than an AC motor which has its power factor at .4-.5 or something (what many AC pumps are at when used as needlewheels). Maybe rather than 'REAL' power, I should have used the term 'apparent power'. Because of the conversion from AC to DC though, the power needed for a DC motor ends up much higher than the regular AC motor's RMS wattage, and not just due to power losses at the conversion.
A simple google search explains it all I suppose:
http://www.geocities.com/vijayakumar777/powerfactor/powerfactor.html